Saves the Day

... read moreOne of the most popular bands of the early-2000s emo scene, Saves The Day hails from New Jersey, and began recording in the '90s, while they were still teenagers. The lineup of the band was significantly altered following the release of their first indie album, 1998's CAN'T SLOW DOWN. As the band's...

Perfecting their power pop/rock since the mid-'90s, New Jersey's Saves the Day helped forge the path for an entire sect of pop-embracing emo. Turning away early on from a melodic hardcore style, the band developed a brand of hooky songwriting, vulnerable lyrics, and a distinctively angular vocal style on albums like 1999's Through Being Cool and their commercial peak 2001's Stay What You Are. The band would continue to evolve, shifting lineups and experimenting with different styles as time passed, but their early output influenced waves of emo-pop acts for years to come.

The first incarnation of Saves the Day formed when singer/songwriter Chris Conley was only 13, and the band was first called Indifference and, later, Seffler. A name change to their current moniker, taken from a lyric from the Farside song "Hero," came with the recording of their first demo. Conley (vocals), Eben D'Amico (bass), Ted Alexander (guitar), David Soloway (guitar), and Bryan Newman (drums) made their debut with 1997's Can't Slow Down on Equal Vision Records, though D'Amico didn't join the lineup until after this album. Recorded during winter break of their high school senior year, the record featured production work from Steve Evetts (Sepultura, Dillinger Escape Plan, Sick of It All).

Through Being Cool followed two years later, gaining a wider fan base and critical success among select punk markets with its greater pop sensibility. A near-fatal car accident when the band while on tour was a major source of inspiration for 2001's dark but tuneful Stay What You Are. Their third album, and first release for Vagrant Records, Stay What You Are brought Rob Schnapf (Beck, Elliott Smith, Toadies) to the mixing boards for a more structured punk rock effort. The album sold more than 200,000 copies, landed on the Billboard charts, and produced two heavily rotated MTV2 videos for "At Your Funeral" and "Freakish." Lots of touring followed; they headlined 2001's Vagrant tour with labelmates Dashboard Confessional, and scored opening slots for Weezer and the Pop Disaster Tour with Green Day and blink-182.

In Reverie, the band's first album for DreamWorks, and with new drummer Pete Parada, followed two years later. Vagrant also issued an archival collection entitled Ups & Downs: Early Recordings and B-Sides in August 2004. The band re-signed with Vagrant in early 2006 and officially welcomed new bassist Manny Carrero into its ranks. Sound the Alarm followed that April, and the band played tour dates through the rest of the year, including dates on that summer's Warped Tour. Parada made his exit in March 2007 and was replaced soon enough by ex-Classic Case/Glassjaw drummer Durijah Lang. Later that year, Saves the Day released Under the Boards, the second of their three-album concept that began with Sound the Alarm.

Before they could finish the trio, Saves the Day would almost completely change their lineup, with Soloway, Lang, and Carrero leaving the band. Conley brought in bassist Rodrigo Palma, guitarist Arun Bali, and drummer Claudio Rivera to bolster the ranks, and went back into the studio in 2009 to begin work on a new album. Saves the Day shopped the completed album around and eventually signed on with Razor & Tie, and in 2011 released their seventh album, Daybreak. With their trilogy complete, the band made the move back to Equal Vision, releasing their eighth album, the self-titled Saves the Day, in the summer of 2013. Also around this time, Rivera left the band and was replaced by drummer Dennis Wilson. Tours followed in 2014, including a supporting slot with Brand New, and a co-headlining tour with Say Anything. In 2018, they returned with their ninth album, the aptly-titled 9. The somewhat conceptual album was made up of songs that mostly told the story of the band, each focusing on different phases of the long and winding path of the previous 20 years. ~ MacKenzie Wilson~ Rovi